The Top 5 April Fool's Day Hoaxes of All Time

• April 1, 1974: A local practical
joker named Porky Bickar had
flown hundreds of old tires into
the volcano's crater and then lit
them on fire, all in a (successful)
attempt to fool the city dwellers
into believing that the volcano
was stirring to life. According to
local legend, when Mount St.
Helens erupted six years later, a
Sitka resident wrote to Bickar to
tell him, "This time you've gone
too far!"

• April 1, 1998: Burger King published
a full page advertisement in USA
Today announcing the introduction
of a new item to their menu: a "LeftHanded Whopper" specially
designed for the 32 million lefthanded Americans. According to the
advertisement, the new whopper
included the same ingredients as the
original Whopper (lettuce, tomato,
hamburger patty, etc.), but all the
condiments were rotated 180
degrees for the benefit of their lefthanded customers.

• April 1, 2008: The BBC announced
that camera crews filming near the
Antarctic for its natural history series
Miracles of Evolution had captured
footage of Adélie penguins taking to
the air. It even offered a video clip of
these flying penguins, which quickly
became one of the most viewed
videos on the internet. Presenter Terry
Jones explained that, instead of
huddling together to endure the
Antarctic winter, these penguins took
to the air and flew thousands of miles
to the rainforests of South America
where they "spend the winter basking
in the tropical sun." A follow-up video
explained how the BBC created the
special effects of the flying penguins.

• April 1, 1933: The front page of
the Madison Capital-Times
announced with large headlines
that the Wisconsin state capitol
building lay in ruins following a
series of mysterious explosions.
The explosions were attributed
to "large quantities of gas,
generated through many weeks
of verbose debate in the Senate
and Assembly chambers."
Accompanying the article was a
picture showing the capitol
building collapsing.

• April 1, 2011: Google announced
the introduction of Gmail Motion,
a new technology that would allow
people to write emails using only
hand gestures. Gmail Motion, the
company explained, used a
computer's webcam and a "spatial
tracking algorithm" to track a
person's gestures and translate
them into words and commands.
For instance, a person could 'open
a message' by making a motion
with their hands as if opening an
envelope. Or they could 'reply' to a
message by pointing backward
over their shoulder.